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THE TEEASON TEIALS.
63
the preliminary difficulty between Mr. Ashmead and myself, and however prejudicial it may have been to the development of the evidence, by preventing that early interchange of views and information, which was necessary to a thorough prepa¬ ration of these important cases, yet I received during the trial every social and professional courtesy at the hands of that gentleman, and he was at all times prompt to act upon any suggestion which might be made by either Mr. Cooper or myself."
Whatever may have been the nature of their difficulties or the character of their settlement, there was a good deal of " girding " during the trial from the defense at the relations of the various opposing counsel; and there was some recrimi¬ nation after the Government's defeat over the responsibility for what its representatives thought was a miscarriage of justice. When the lawyers were finally lined up the record showed these appearances: J. W. Ashmead, D. A. U. S., G. L. Ashmead and J. R. Ludlow represented the United States: R. J. Brent, Attorney General of Maryland, James Cooper, a Senator of the United States for Pennsylvania, and R. M. Lee, of Philadelphia, appeared as special counsel; Mr. Brent by order of the Governor of Maryland, of which State Mr. Gorsuch was a citizen; Mr. Cooper and Lee also private counsel of Mr. Gorsuch's relatives: For the prisoner, J. J. Lewis, of West Chester, Th. Stevens, of Lancaster, John M. Read, T. A. Cuyler and W. A. Jackson, of Philadelphia.
David Paul Brown also sat at the prisoners' counsel table; he appeared for Joseph Scarlet, whose case, with that of others, depended on the result of Hanway's trial.
Most of these names will be remembered by the general reader as already eminent or soon to so become. The Ash- meads were notably able lawyers; Mr. Brent had high pro¬ fessional position; James Cooper was then United States Sen¬ ator, from Pennsylvania; Ludlow later became a member of the Philadelphia judiciary; Lewis of West Chester and Ste-

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THE TEEASON TEIALS.
63
the preliminary difficulty between Mr. Ashmead and myself, and however prejudicial it may have been to the development of the evidence, by preventing that early interchange of views and information, which was necessary to a thorough prepa¬ ration of these important cases, yet I received during the trial every social and professional courtesy at the hands of that gentleman, and he was at all times prompt to act upon any suggestion which might be made by either Mr. Cooper or myself."
Whatever may have been the nature of their difficulties or the character of their settlement, there was a good deal of " girding " during the trial from the defense at the relations of the various opposing counsel; and there was some recrimi¬ nation after the Government's defeat over the responsibility for what its representatives thought was a miscarriage of justice. When the lawyers were finally lined up the record showed these appearances: J. W. Ashmead, D. A. U. S., G. L. Ashmead and J. R. Ludlow represented the United States: R. J. Brent, Attorney General of Maryland, James Cooper, a Senator of the United States for Pennsylvania, and R. M. Lee, of Philadelphia, appeared as special counsel; Mr. Brent by order of the Governor of Maryland, of which State Mr. Gorsuch was a citizen; Mr. Cooper and Lee also private counsel of Mr. Gorsuch's relatives: For the prisoner, J. J. Lewis, of West Chester, Th. Stevens, of Lancaster, John M. Read, T. A. Cuyler and W. A. Jackson, of Philadelphia.
David Paul Brown also sat at the prisoners' counsel table; he appeared for Joseph Scarlet, whose case, with that of others, depended on the result of Hanway's trial.
Most of these names will be remembered by the general reader as already eminent or soon to so become. The Ash- meads were notably able lawyers; Mr. Brent had high pro¬ fessional position; James Cooper was then United States Sen¬ ator, from Pennsylvania; Ludlow later became a member of the Philadelphia judiciary; Lewis of West Chester and Ste-